Contents
Mission 3: Alaska
Call to Action
Restricted Access
Classified Mission Background Report
Report Number 1
Report Number 2
Report Number 3
Report Number 4
Report Number 5
Report Number 6
Report Number 7
Report Number 8
Report Number 9
Report Number 10
Report Number 11
Report Number 12
Report Number 13
Report Number 14
Report Number 15
Report Number 16
Report Number 17
Report Number 18
Report Number 19
Report Number 20
Report Number 21
Report Number 22
Report Number 23
Report Number 24
Report Number 25
Report Number 26
Report Number 27
Cast of Characters
Keep Reading
About the Author
Other Books By Jill Williamson
Copyright Notice
MISSION 3: ALASKA
In the midst of training for the outdoor survival trip to Alaska, Spencer is distracted by a mysterious young woman—Nick's new girlfriend. He's not just wondering how someone that gorgeous would waste her time on a jerk like Nick, he recognizes this girl from her bit part in one of the cultish Jolt movies he's been investigating. She's up to something, and Spencer is determined to find out what. As he gets closer to the truth, it becomes harder to know who to trust. Things are getting dangerous. Can Spencer figure out what's going on, or will this mystery leave him M.I.A?
Broken Trust is the third, full-length novel in The Mission League spy adventure series designed for reluctant tween and teen audiences.
YOU HAVE ACCESSED THE INTERNATIONAL SERVER FOR THE MISSION LEAGUE. THESE FILES CONTAIN CLASSIFIED INFORMATION ON THE ORGANIZATION, AGENTS, CRIMINALS, PROCEDURES, TRAININGS, AND MISSIONS.
GOD HAS CALLED. YOU HAVE ANSWERED.
CLASSIFIED MISSION BACKGROUND REPORT
TITLE: The Need to Know
SUBMITTED BY: Agent-in-Training Spencer Garmond
Saved. Born again. Bible thumper. Churcher. Yeah, that’s right. I signed on. I know it’s not the popular thing to do in today’s “one brain for all” culture, but God has proved himself real, present, and active in my life, and I’m done denying that fact.
You might wonder what led to this change of heart, as I have always been against Christians and most everything they stand for. Well, I had a rough few months. Coach had been helping me look at NCAA schools where I could play basketball. I had some good offers, too. Then I tore my ACL. And, guess what? The offers went bye-bye. Really fast.
It was a pretty dark time for me. Read my report titled Ambushed if you want the details, but the shortened version is this: NCAA offers vanished. Actress Brittany Holmes tried to use me. The girl I liked moved away. Kip, my supposed BFF, tricked me into eating brownies laced with iVitrax. I got arrested for possession of an illegal substance. Got expelled from school. And my grandma grounded me for life.
Basically, I hit rock bottom. And it hurt.
But my real friends didn’t leave me there, bleeding. They showed up. The truth came out at the hearing, and the judge dropped all the charges against me. My basketball coach hired me on as a coach so I could be there for my team at State. In light of the criminal charges being dropped, the school board decided to let me, Alex, and Mike back into school after a two week suspension. And that girl I liked might be moving back. So I guess God had better plans for my life than I did, so I decided to start paying more attention to him. After all, he loves me and wants me to make the most of my time on this rock.
That summary didn’t tell you much about my past—that I live in Southern California, that the Agent Development Program of the Mission League recruited me a few years back, and that they’re a secret branch of INTERPOL spies who fight against the forces of evil in this dark and messed-up world. That rundown also didn’t remind you that my real name is Jonas Wright and I’m in a witness protection program of sorts, hiding from my supposed criminal dad, who was supposedly responsible for my mom’s death. It didn’t tell you about my training missions to Moscow or Okinawa or how Anya Vseveloda keeps trying to kidnap me and torture me for information I don’t even have. It didn’t say how I have the gift of prophecy, sometimes have visions, and am still learning how to interpret them so I’ll know what to do when stuff comes to me.
All that is just life, and now that I’ve decided to trust God with my life, I’m not so worried about everything. Sure, I’m in rehab for my knee, and I still plan to play ball and try and snag a college scholarship. But if it doesn’t happen, or if I end up playing D2 ball or—please no—NAIA, I’ll take what I can get, you know? I trust God. And the rest is still unwritten. Well, expect for what’s in this report. It’s an Outdoor Survival Training year, and we’re gearing up for a big trip to Alaska. If you want to know how that turns out, read on.
Spencer Garmond
Agent-in-Training
Pilot Point Mission League
REPORT NUMBER: 1
REPORT TITLE: I Drive a Banana on Wheels
SUBMITTED BY: Agent-in-Training Spencer Garmond
LOCATION: Grandma Alice’s house, Pilot Point, California, USA
DATE AND TIME: Sunday, May 20, 1:38 p.m.
My MacBook screen froze. Buffering. Again. The second Light Goddess movie had stopped on a close-up of one of Brittany’s cohorts: a gorgeous, dark-skinned Indian girl, who had just been pricked with the “juice” and now had grid marks on her arm. The girl’s eyes were closed, her face frozen in a mixed expression of pain and pleasure.
My head spun and I saw the girl in my mind in a completely different place and time.
She lies in a hospital bed, hair matted to her head. She’s wearing a white sheet. No make-up. It makes her look younger. Scared. Nurses surround her, and one male doctor who is speaking very fast in a language I can’t understand. The scene paints a clear enough picture for me.
She is pregnant and about to have the baby.
The glimpse ended as quickly as it had come. I shuddered and lay back against my pillow, wondering why I’d have a prophecy about some random actress.
It just meant that I was getting closer to finding out the truth about these movies.
It was no secret that I loved the Jolt franchise, and while the films were cheesy, far-fetched, and had no chance at ever drawing any Oscar nods, I had discovered a pattern within them. After studying the scripts from the four movies that had been released so far, I had listed the following similarities:
1. Brittany Holmes starred as the Light Goddess, a demon huntress who wore a lacy black leotard, complete with a utility belt filled with gadgets and gizmos to help her slay demons.
2. The Light Goddess lived in a place called The Sanctuary.
3. The Light Goddess met random everyman characters, who always turned out to be led astray by demons and were sometimes possessed.
4. The Light Goddess taught those everymen to seek out “connection,” so they could be free from bondage.
5. Connection was achieved through the injection of a mystery serum called “juice,” administered by needle or by the grid shooters which faithful followers took daily.
6. If a demon possessed an everyman, the Light Goddess would kill it with her massive black dagger, which she called Saber.
7. The Light Goddess monologued her demon killings in sexy rhymes.
8. The Light Goddess helped others release the “power within” and reminded her followers tha
t the “power was inside each of them.”
9. The Light Goddess eventually passed through four levels of consciousness to shed her mortal shell: sleep, sleepwalking, seeing, and understanding.
10. The Light Goddess prayed to the Daysman for strength.
Seeing it all written down on one page of my journal made me realize how twisted it all was. I logged my glimpse of the pregnant actress in my journal, then flipped to a clean page, and added that in the real world, Brittany Holmes was the spokesperson for the Free Light Youth, members of which were called FLYs. And after the release of Jolt IV, the FLYs had encouraged local chapters to attend Jolt Revolt parties where they could get high and summon the Daysman through séances, just like the Light Goddess and her followers did in the movies.
Not that they’d admit to having done that, of course, because encouraging teenagers to get high would be illegal—thank you very much, Kip.
No, instead the Free Light Youth claimed to be an organization that helped teens find their voice in the world. But get this: the parent organization was called the Free Light Foundation.
Right away it rang a bell, though for days I couldn’t remember why. Google hadn’t helped, either … until I clicked on “images,” which brought up a familiar maze tattoo. That discovery led me to my bottom desk drawer where I kept a copy of every Mission League report I’d ever turned in since coming home from Moscow that first summer.
These reports were not neatly filed as they probably should have been. I had to pull the drawer all the way out to find the papers that were crammed in the very back. They sprung out at me like some kind of just opened snake-in-a-can. Then I had to find the right one.
But I did. Finally. And my hunch paid off. It was right there in the report I’d written about my visit to Bratva Headquarters in Moscow. The night I’d nearly gotten myself killed by Anya and her goons. The tattoo Anya had on her arm—the same one Pasha had—represented the Bratva cult. It also was the logo of the Free Light Foundation.
I Googled the FLF and quickly discovered that Diane Bay MacCormack just so happened to run it. Diane Bay MacCormack, my own—supposed—stepmother.
That brought me to my first ethical crossroads as a newbie Christian. I hadn’t told anyone about Irving MacCormack claiming to be my dad and how I had gone to visit him so he could work his connections to get me the best surgeon for my knee.
Which he had. And the knee was well on the mend.
Since I first laid eyes on the guy, I’d suspected he was a liar. Now with this link to Anya, I was certain that Irving MacCormack and I shared no DNA. Zero. Zip. Zilch. Nada.
Either he worked for Anya or Anya worked for him or maybe they both worked for his wife Diane. Whichever way, what was their end game? Make movies to spread their weirdo beliefs? Use superstar actresses like Brittany Holmes to reel people in? Fine, but what did any of that have to do with me? Did Anya still want to question me? Is that why MacCormack was always inviting me to his mansion? If so, what were they waiting for? He knew where I lived. Why didn’t he just come and get me?
I flipped back a page in my journal, wondering how the pregnant actress tied in to all this.
Outside, a car backfired. I jumped so high, I knocked my cell phone onto the floor. A deep breath to calm myself, and I reached down to grab it. As I sat up again, it vibrated in my hand. I glanced at the notification on the screen and my gut tightened. Facebook message from my so-called daddy.
Miss you, son. Would love to have you over for dinner.
Dad
Sure he would, the freak. I shuddered and tossed the phone down by my feet.
You’d think a kid in a witness-protection program would have a better idea who he was hiding from and why. Not me.
I sighed. What to do? Come clean to Mr. S, my Mission League teacher? Email Prière, the international liaison to our group?
The thing is, I’d been working on this Jolt movie investigation for a while. I had no idea if anyone was actually taking these reports seriously.
They should.
Either way, I knew better than to tell my handlers things that would only make them take away more of my freedom. Until I had figured all this out, I wasn’t going to give them any reasons to tighten their hold. As it was I had two agents following me at all times. Plus I always wore the cross necklace Grandma Alice gave me a few years ago, which was a gadget that allowed agents to track my whereabouts. I’ve only taken it off a few times when I didn’t want to be followed.
Like when I’d gone to MacCormack’s mansion in Pacific Palisades.
A knock on my door, and I jumped again.
“Spencer? Can I come in?”
Man, I needed to calm down. “Yeah, Grandma.”
The door swung open, and Grandma Alice peeked in, her short hair spiked with too much mousse. Today she wore a black and white print shirt that reminded me of M.C. Escher staircases, black pants, and dozens of red metal bracelets that covered each forearm like some kind of 80s diva battle armor.
“Mr. S and Prière are here,” she said.
It took a moment for that statement to register. “Mr. S and Prière came to your quilt club meeting?”
“About quilt club… It’s time I told you the truth.” She stared at me as if she’d just confessed.
“Yeahhh…?” I prompted.
A deep breath. “It’s not just a quilt club, Spencer. We’re prayer warriors. Retired Mission League agents who still want to help.”
“I’m sorry, what?” Again the woman had side-swiped my brain. “Mrs. Martin was an agent? And Mrs. Bogarth?” I pictured the duo fifty years younger and riding on Harleys instead of the twin motor scooters they took everywhere today. “And Mrs. Daggett?” Actually, I knew about Mrs. Daggett already, but it was still hard to believe.
“Yes, yes, and yes. Now come out here. The men want to speak with you.”
Secret agents showing up at my place and wanting to chat? Happened all the time.
Frankly, it happened too much.
I swung my feet to the floor, careful of my right leg, which looked skeletal next to my left. At nine weeks after the surgery, I still couldn’t straighten my knee all the way. Whenever Mario, my physical therapist, forced it straight, it cracked. He said that was normal, though every time it happened, my senior basketball season flashed before my eyes as a lost cause. I had to get my knee working if I was ever going to get any D-1 universities to look at me seriously again.
But I could worry over that later. Apparently I had a room full of retired spies to deal with first.
I followed Grandma to the living room. As always on quilt club day, the old ladies had taken over every available seat, if not with their bodies, then with piles of fabric or pattern pieces or quilting books. Mr. S and Prière were standing before the Wall of Fame, which was Grandma’s shrine to old rock stars. I couldn’t help but notice Mr. S’s resemblance to Phil Collins or the way Prière shared Sonny Bono’s affinity for a wayward mustache.
“Prayer warriors, huh?” I said. “All this time you’ve been lying to me?” I shook my head at Mrs. Bogarth, then met Mrs. Martin’s gaze through her bifocals and frowned. “I’m terribly disappointed in you all.”
“We weren’t lying to you,” Grandma said. “We quilt too.”
“ ‘Discretion is the perfection of reason, and a guide to us in all the duties of life.’ Walter Scott,” Mr. S said.
“Don’t feel bad for not knowing,” Mrs. Martin said. “The Mission League prides itself on anonymity.”
“We never meant to hurt you, Spencer,” Mrs. Bogarth said.
“My children still don’t know,” Mrs. Martin added.
Okaay… So guilt complexes ran deep, apparently. “It’s fine,” I said, not wanting anyone losing sleep over a prayer group. I could use all the prayer I could get.
“I’ve brought you a gift, Spencer.” Mrs. Daggett, off topic as usual, heaved herself up from the couch. A collection of quilt squares, thimbles, and spools of thread fell into the
imprint her backside had left behind. She lumbered toward the door.
I watched her warily, suspecting that my “gift” was a handful of hard candies that I would likely earn after carrying in something from her car. “You’re too good to me, Mrs. Daggett. I don’t deserve your gifts. Really.”
“Your gift is parked at the curb,” Mrs. Daggett said.
Parked? I glanced out the windows, but Grandma’s crochet curtains were too thick to see through.
Mrs. Daggett opened the inner door, then pushed out the screen. She held it with her huge orthopedic shoe but stood in my way, as intimidating as an NBA center.
She held up a set of keys and jangled them. “It needs some maintenance.”
“More like a transfusion,” Mrs. Bogarth said from her seat on the couch.
“If that car was a person,” Mrs. Martin said, “it would be in the ICU.”
She and Mrs. Bogarth chuckled.
The word “car” had intrigued me. Mrs. Daggett hadn’t moved, so I took the keys, which were attached to a pink metal heart with the words “Mom’s Taxi” in the center. I narrowed my eyes and took my best guess. “You’re giving me your car?”
“Not my Cadillac,” she said. “The one I had before. The one my kids learned to drive in.”
“Remember when Charlie ran off the road in Griffith Park?” Mrs. Bogarth said. “He got the wheels hung up over a log, and Lil had to call a tow.”
“He’d been looking at the Christmas lights,” Grandma Alice said, grinning with the memory. “Took out those elves holding the gift boxes.”
“Lil, let Spencer take a look,” Mrs. Martin said to Mrs. Daggett.
“That’s what I’m doing.” Mrs. Daggett stepped aside, so I pushed the screen door open the rest of the way and walked out onto the porch, flooded by the scorching May sun.
There was indeed a car parked at the curb.
It was old.
Broken Trust Page 1